Listed 4 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for destination: "ARGISSA Ancient city LARISSA".
A city of Pelasgiotis, in antiquity identified with Homeric Argissa
(Il. 2.738; Strab. 9.440; Steph. Byz. s.v.). It was on the left bank of the Peneios
river, supposed to be 40 stades (ca. 7 km) from Atrax (Strab. 9.438). This has
long been considered an ancient site at a prehistoric mound (Gremnos or Gremnos
Magoula) about 7 km W of Larissa, just on the left bank of the Peneios. This identification
was denied by Stahlin, who placed Argura at an ancient site at Gunitza, ca. 8
km W of Gremnos Magoula, but the Gremnos-Argura identification has recently been
reasserted by Franke and Milojcic. The history of the city is virtually unknown.
The prehistoric mound has been half carried away by the river. It
served as the acropolis of the ancient city, which is otherwise in a flat plain.
Excavations on the mound in 1955-58 turned up sherds from the Geometric through
Roman periods as well as prehistoric. One well found in 1956 contained Classical,
another early Hellenistic, pottery. A fragment of an early Classical terracotta
revetment found on the mound may indicate the presence of a temple, perhaps to
Artemis, to whom an inscription was found in the excavations. A test trench on
the N side of the mound produced parts of two archaic-Classical buildings. Right
at the river's edge below and a little to the E of the mound are a few courses
remaining of a tower constructed of large rectangular blocks, which was built
over the remains of an earlier one of polygonal masonry, and seems itself to have
been rebuilt. It is conjectured that this was a late archaic tower rebuilt in
the 4th c. B.C. From the mound the course of two concentric city walls can be
seen to the NE and W, about 350-450 m away from the mound. The inner one is possibly
archaic or Classical; the outer, Hellenistic. Investigations within the lower
city area in 1958 turned up sherds of the 6th c. B.C. through the Hellenistic
period, and some scanty remains of a public building and houses. The agora of
the ancient city may have been in the flat area immediately to the E of the mound.
Objects from the excavations and some found by chance are in the Larissa Museum.
A tumulus (Skismeni Magoula) ca. 2 km NW of Gremnos Magoula and 1
km N of the river was partially excavated in 1958-59. Under the edge of the mound
were three stone sarcophagi, close to each other and radiating from the center
of the mound. These were plain, and had each been lined with a wooden coffin,
one of which was well preserved and contained fragments of clothing and a pillow
along with the skeleton. One of the others contained a lekythos of the 4th c.
B.C. No trace of a built tomb or other grave was found in the center of the mound.
Between Gremnos Magoula and Skismeni Magoula was a Hellenistic necropolis on the
road leading towards Gunitza. This was investigated in 1955 and 1958 and yielded
a few objects. Some 70 m W-SW of the Hellenistic necropolis one of the Classical
period was discovered in 1958. To the N of the road to Larissa from Gremnos Magoula,
2 km E of the mound, is a group of eight tumuli (Pente Magoules), perhaps Hellenistic
grave mounds, but so far uninvestigated. By the road at this point Leake noted
some ancient foundations and blocks, and a piece of a Doric column (chord of flute
6 inches).
T. S. Mackay, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Nov 2002 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
Argura (Argoupa: Eth. Argoupaios). Called Argissa (Argissa) in Homer (Il. ii. 738), a town in Pelasgiotis in Thessaly, on the Peneus, and near Larissa. The distance between this place and Larissa is so small as to explain the remark of the Scholiast on Apollonius, that the Argissa of Homer was the same as Larissa. Leake supposes the site of Argura to be indicated by the tumuli at a little distance from Larissa, extending three quarters of a mile from east to west. (Strab. ix. p. 440; Schol. in Apoll. Rhod. i. 40; Steph. B. s. v.; Eustath. ad II. l. c.; Leake, Northern Greece, vol. iii. p. 367, vol. iv. p. 534.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited July 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
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